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CIA Director John Ratcliffe is unconcerned by speculation that agents who are fired under Department of Government Efficiency cuts may take the nation’s secrets to foreign adversaries. 

‘Any individual who would be willing to sell the Nation’s secrets to a foreign adversary has no place working at the Agency that plays an incredible role in keeping Americans safe every day,’ Ratcliffe told Fox News Digital in a statement.

CNN reported on Monday that mass firings and buyouts offered to agents were under discussion among CIA ‘top leadership,’ who were apparently worried that losing their jobs might prompt disgruntled former officers to take their classified intelligence to foreign intelligence services like those of China or Russia. 

‘You’re telling me that a professional setback could cause people to risk the consequences of treason and betray their country, and your argument is that those are the kind of people who should stay inside CIA?’ a source familiar with the CIA head’s thinking added to Fox News Digital. 

‘There’s a general sense that it’s more of a justification for maintaining the status quo, but if potential traitors are there, it’s hard to argue the solution is for them to continue maintaining access to the nation’s secrets.’

‘You’re just rolling the dice that these folks are gonna honor their secrecy agreement and not volunteer to a hostile intelligence service,’ an unnamed U.S. official reportedly told CNN. 

The CIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence recently tried to fire 51 employees who worked on diversity issues, and newer employees are potentially on the chopping block to comply with a government-wide effort to root out probationary employees before they earn civil service protection. 

A judge put the diversity firings on pause after agents sued to stop them. Kevin Carroll, an attorney who represents 19 of the CIA officers affected, said his clients were just ‘regular American intelligence officers’ who had been assigned to complete diversity tasks on a rotational basis or in addition to their day jobs. 

‘Some of these people are like 18 years in, they’re a couple years short of their pensions. So firing them instead of just letting them first look for another job in the agency or elsewhere in the intel community, is a lack of due process,’ he told Fox News Digital. ‘These people had regular career paths within the intel community and were slotted into these jobs for a bit. That’s all.’

A judge will determine whether to offer injunctive relief on Thursday. 

The CIA also offered buyouts to employees who offered to resign, in line with a government-wide push to trim the federal workforce, but it’s not clear how many employees were offered and accepted the offer. 

Earlier this month, the agency reportedly sent an unclassified email listing the names of agents, first name and last initial, who had been there less than two years to the White House, prompting concerns those names could fall into the wrong hands. 

Though the exact number of people employed by the CIA is classified, the agency is known to employ thousands who engage in covert collection and analysis of intelligence, both at its Virginia headquarters and overseas.

Foreign adversaries like China and Russia are known to target former U.S. intelligence officials, offering them large sums of money for the classified information they are privy to. The Justice Department has charged multiple former military and intel officials for providing information to China.

The CIA was known for friction with the White House during Trump’s first administration but was hit with a wave of retirements in 2021 and 2022 as those who were recruited after the September 11, 2001, attacks hit their 20-year mark. The agency hit a recruiting high point again in 2024. 

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The bruise seen on the back of President Donald Trump’s hand is from him shaking other people’s hands, the White House said. 

Trump was photographed earlier this week with a bruise on his right hand as he met with French President Emmanuel Macron at the White House. 

‘President Trump is a man of the people and he meets more Americans and shakes their hands on a daily basis than any other President in history,’ White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News Digital in a statement.

‘His commitment is unwavering and he proves that every single day,’ she added.

‘President Trump has bruises on his hand because he’s constantly working and shaking hands all day every day,’ Leavitt also told NBC News. 

Around Thanksgiving last year, Trump, during an interview with TIME magazine, was asked about the bruising.

‘It’s from shaking hands with thousands of people,’ he said.

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The House of Representatives has adopted a resolution that will eventually become a massive multi-trillion-dollar bill full of President Donald Trump’s priorities on the border, defense, energy and taxes.

In a major victory for House GOP leaders, the resolution passed in a 217 to 215 vote.

All Democrats voted against the measure, along with lone Republican rebel Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who was concerned about its effect on the national deficit.

The next step is now for the relevant House committees to meet and build their own proposals, which will eventually be returned into the framework and negotiated into a compromise deal with the Senate.

It was a dramatic scene in the House chamber on Monday night as Republican leaders delayed formally ending a vote for roughly 45 minutes as they worked to convince conservative fiscal hawks to support the legislation.

Impatient Democrats called out loud for the vote to be closed as Republicans huddled in varied groups.

Two people on the House floor told Fox News Digital that President Donald Trump got involved at one point, speaking to one of the holdouts, Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., by phone.

Reps. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., and Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, could be seen on the phone at other points on the House floor as well, but it’s not clear if they were speaking with Trump.

At one point, House GOP leaders appeared to lose confidence that they had enough support and abruptly canceled the planned vote. 

Moments later, however, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle were rushing back to the House floor and Fox News Digital was told the vote would be held.

Meanwhile, three House Democrats who had been absent early in the day returned for the Tuesday evening vote in dramatic fashion. 

Rep. Brittany Pettersen, D-Colo., who had a baby roughly a month ago, returned to the House floor with her infant to oppose the bill. And Rep. Kevin Mullin, R-Calif., who was recently hospitalized for an infection, appeared in the chamber aided by a walker.

House and Senate Republicans are aiming to use their majorities to advance Trump’s agenda via the budget reconciliation process. 

It’s a Senate maneuver that lowers the threshold for passage from two-thirds to a simple majority, but it’s used when a party controls both houses of Congress and the White House because it allows that party to pass its policy goals even under the slimmest margins.

And Republicans are dealing with slim margins indeed; with current numbers, the House GOP can afford no more than one defection to pass anything without Democratic votes if all liberals are voting.

On the Senate side, Republicans can lose no more than two of their own in the reconciliation process.

The House resolution aimed to increase spending on border security, the judiciary and defense by roughly $300 billion, while seeking at least $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion in spending cuts elsewhere. 

As written, the House bill also provided $4.5 trillion to extend President Donald Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions, which expire at the end of this year.

An amendment negotiated by House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, and conservatives on his panel would also force lawmakers to make $2 trillion in cuts, or else risk the $4.5 trillion for Trump’s tax cuts getting reduced by the difference. 

The resolution also fulfilled Trump’s directive to act on the debt limit, raising it by $4 trillion or roughly two years. 

A bipartisan deal struck in 2023 saw the debt limit suspended until January 2025. Now, projections show the U.S. could run out of cash to pay its debts by spring if Congress does not act.

The resolution’s odds were touch and go for much of the week so far, since House lawmakers returned from a week-long recess period Monday.

Several fiscal conservatives had demanded more assurances from House GOP leadership that Republicans would seek deep spending cuts to offset the cost of Trump’s priorities.

Republican lawmakers in more competitive districts are concerned some cuts may go too far, however. 

The resolution directs the House Energy & Commerce Committee to find at least $880 billion in spending cuts – which those lawmakers fear will mean severe cuts for federal programs like Medicaid.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., pushed back against fears of such cuts during his weekly press conference on Tuesday.

‘Medicaid is hugely problematic because it has a lot of fraud, waste and abuse. Everybody knows that. We all know it intuitively. No one in here would disagree,’ Johnson said. ‘What we’re talking about is rooting out the fraud, waste, and abuse. It doesn’t matter what party you’re in, you should be for that because it saves your money, and it preserves the programs so that it is available for the people who desperately need it.’

It was also supported by a wide swath of Republicans, including conservative Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, a member of the House Budget Committee that approved the bill earlier this month.

‘It’s the best bill we’re going to get,’ Gill said while praising Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, for his efforts. ‘If I were writing it then I’d write it differently, but this is the best we’re gonna get it.’

Rep. Randy Feenstra, R-Iowa, said he was eager to begin working on ‘cutting taxes for Iowans, securing our border, unleashing American energy production, and eliminating waste and fraud in our government.’

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LOS ANGELES — There’s a saying: “Play with emotion. Don’t let emotion play with you.”

Luka Dončić nearly lost control in the first half of the Los Angeles Lakers’ 107-99 victory Tuesday over the Dallas Mavericks.

It was the first time Dončić played against his former team after the trade that sent him to Los Angeles in exchange for Anthony Davis. With Davis out due to injury, the contest was solely Dončić’s revenge game.

It didn’t take long before Dončić earned an early technical foul after sharing his displeasure over a no-call with an official.

“I don’t know,” Dončić said when asked how he handled his emotions throughout the day. “They’re weird moments. I didn’t know what I was doing and I’m just glad we got a win.”

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Lakers coach JJ Redick mentioned before the game that he hoped Dončić would be able to balance his emotions throughout the evening. The coach admitted after the game he felt Dončić was going through it in the first half before managing to settle in.

“Honestly, I don’t even remember,” Dončić said. “There were a lot of emotions and not much sleep. I can’t even explain it. It was just a different game. … I’m just glad it’s over.”

Dončić shook off some of that early frustration with the referee and channeled it toward the Mavericks’ bench.

“I think with him, he is at his best when he has that balance of joy and playfulness and that killer mentality,” Redick said during his pregame availability. “Just perfectly living in the moment of competition and he will find that tonight.”

LeBron James praised Dončić for how he handled his emotions. James has been in similar situations throughout his career, playing against his former team and teammates.

“He handled them as well as you can,” James said. “There’s a lot of emotions that go into it when you give so much to a franchise and sacrifice so much for a franchise.”

The Slovenian player began his seventh season with the Mavericks in late October before he was traded in early February.

Dončić was playing quarterback again late Tuesday when he threw the ball from just in front of the half-court line, completing a pass to James under the basket. James slammed the ball down to give the Lakers a 96-91 lead with 4:05 left in the final period.

“That was really big,” Dončić said. “For him to do that and 40 years old and take over the game, it was unbelievable to watch.”

The Lakers continued to bring fans to their feet with three consecutive dunks from former Maverick Dorian Finney-Smith, forward Rui Hachimura and James.

The duo of James and Dončić connected one more time for a James layup, leaving a smile on the guard’s face.

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Diana Taurasi’s legacy can be measured in the many titles she won, the many years she played or the many, many, many technical fouls she collected.

Just know she won’t spend one second worrying about it.

‘You don’t get to decide your legacy. You actually have to do stuff, and then it’s up for the people who watched and followed and loved the game. It’s their prerogative,’ Taurasi told USA TODAY Sports. “I know what I did, and I feel full with the game of basketball. I’m full and happy right now.”

Taurasi made official Tuesday night what had long been suspected: One of the best to ever play the game is retiring. She leaves as a three-time WNBA champion, a three-time NCAA champion and a six-time Olympic champion, her influence on the game unquantifiable.

Taurasi’s initial announcement came in an interview with TIME magazine.  

‘There are athletes that are transcendent, who transcend women’s sports. Diana was one of the originals for that,” Phoenix Mercury president Vince Kozar told USA TODAY Sports. “I remember (early in Taurasi’s WNBA career) being in airports with her, and there were people who knew exactly who she was. They knew she went to UConn, they knew the bun.

‘Even if they didn’t know her name, they knew her and they knew her game.”

The game. That’s what it’s always been about for Taurasi. The game and only the game.

Taurasi was both a magician and an assassin on the floor. She whipped passes that opponents — and sometimes her own teammates — couldn’t see coming and had even less chance defending. She could score from anywhere, from any angle, leaving opponents slack-jawed and deflated.

You think Caitlin Clark jacking up 3s from the logo is fun to watch? Taurasi was Clark before Clark even picked up a basketball.

Mostly, though, Taurasi was a competitor. It didn’t matter if it was practice, a pickup game or winner-take-all for a title. She wanted to win and she wasn’t going to let anyone or anything get in her way.

After UConn lost in the Final Four her freshman year, Taurasi famously vowed the Huskies wouldn’t lose another tournament game while she was there, and then made good on her promise. And when the Mercury lost the 2021 WNBA Finals to the Chicago Sky, a locker room door bore the brunt of her frustrations.

“All I did,” Taurasi said, “was play as hard as I could.”

It was no different than what Michael Jordan and LeBron James had done. But her fierceness and the authenticity behind it was something we hadn’t really seen in women athletes before Taurasi. She spoke her mind without caring about the consequences, whether she was calling out inequities, analyzing a game or making fun of UConn coach Geno Auriemma. She enjoyed being the villain, knowing it was the ultimate sign of respect.

That, in turn, allowed other women to own their greatness in a way they previously hadn’t.

The trash talking from Clark and Angel Reese? The barking at refs by Kelsey Plum? The demand by W players that the league and team owners treat them like athletes and not charity projects? The celebration of love and marriage and family in all its forms? There’s a direct throughline from Taurasi to all that.

Not that Taurasi ever planned on being a disruptor. It just happened to be the byproduct of her passion for the game.

“I lived the dream. I got to do the thing that I love the most, and I’ve learned so much about myself and other people and how to improve as a teammate and as a human being,” Taurasi said.

Ask Taurasi what she’s most proud of, and she won’t mention the titles or the gains for women athletes or even being the WNBA’s logo. (The W has never confirmed this, but come on. The silhouette, the shooting motion, the bun? It’s obvious.)

Instead, Taurasi points to spending her entire WNBA career in Phoenix and suiting up for Team USA every time she was asked.

‘She always answered the call. That, to me, is the lasting impact. She always showed up,” Kozar said.

At 42, Taurasi can still play — and play at a high level. Her 36 games last year were the most she played in her 20-year WNBA career, and only Natasha Cloud and Kahleah Copper averaged more minutes for the Mercury. And that was on top of the Paris Olympics!

Taurasi was Phoenix’s third-leading scorer at 14.9 points a game last season, and she dropped 21 points on the Minnesota Lynx in Game 1 of the playoffs.

But the older a player gets, the more important offseason work becomes. And as the day she’d have to start that work got closer earlier this year, Taurasi realized she no longer wanted to commit to that grind.

‘It wasn’t a decision I took lightly. But … knowing that I was going to have to give myself a bit of a deadline to start really ramping up and prepping, that was kind of the moment where I knew I was probably done,” she said.

She also knew because of a conversation she and her wife, Penny Taylor, had when Taylor retired in 2016.

Taurasi recalled asking Taylor if she was worried about life after basketball or apprehensive at giving up something that’s been your life for so long, and Taylor saying no.

‘She was just so ready, and I think that’s where I’m at right now,” Taurasi said. ‘I’m just ready. I’m ready for whatever’s next.”

What that is, she doesn’t know yet. She wants to stay involved in basketball, though doesn’t see herself coaching. She’s looking forward to downtime with Taylor and their two young children.

And sooner rather than later, she’ll return to the Footprint Center to see her number retired and her jersey hung from the rafters. Five years from now, she’ll be a first-ballot inductee into the Basketball Hall of Fame.  

‘She just really, really wanted to play basketball,’ Kozar said, ‘and do it the right way.”

Because she did, the game has changed for the better. That is Taurasi’s legacy.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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Georgia’s castaway became Miami’s treasure, and Carson Beck’s antihero billing suits ‘the U.’
And if we allow ourselves to stop seeing Carson Beck in a black hat, maybe we’ll recognize this as his chance for a comeback story.
Carson Beck need not apologize for liking sports cars, striking NIL deals, dating an influencer or for transferring to Miami after five seasons at Georgia. Just win.

Carson Beck cannot have nice things. Seriously, thieves steal his nice things, and then John Q. College Football Fan laughs at the college quarterback.

When a crew of car bandits stole two of Beck’s rides and one belonging to his girlfriend last week, I detected no cries of “Justice for Carson!” Instead, a collective shrug ensued, as folks mused why a 22-year-old college athlete needs a Lamborghini anyway.

Beck’s expensive sports cars feed into this perception that he needs to focus more on wins and less on wheels. That perception might register as a touch unfair, but after Beck grinned on the sideline like Cheshire Cat in the closing minutes of Georgia’s loss to Mississippi, the narrative cemented that he’s just not all that consumed by winning.

By the time Beck transferred to Miami, he’d become college football’s resident antihero. In other words, he’s perfect for “the U.”

Maybe, on some level, Beck appreciated that. Certainly, Miami should appreciate Beck.

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Georgia’s castaway became Miami’s treasure, and Beck’s arrival buoyed the Hurricanes’ 2025 College Football Playoff hopes.

“He is athletic, he’s smart, he’s got superior arm talent, he’s accurate,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal said. “He wants to be great. One of the best qualities is, he wanted to be here at Miami.

The hierarchy of ACC quarterbacks begins with some ordering of Beck, Clemson’s Cade Klubnik and SMU’s Kevin Jennings. Is it any wonder, then, that those three schools are front-runners to win the conference?

I’m thinking Miami couldn’t care less what model of car Beck drives and is more interested in how his elbow recovers. His last dropback for Georgia turned into a fumble, after Texas defender Trey Moore wrenched Beck’s throwing elbow and injured his ulnar collateral ligament. Beck underwent surgery just before Christmas.

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He put his NFL future on hold and broke with Georgia. This Miami reboot gives Beck a chance to not only restore his pro credentials but combat this perception that he’s just not all that motivated to be elite.

Beck’s uptick to an SEC-most 12 interceptions last season at Georgia probably had more to do with losing security blanket Brock Bowers to the NFL and his offensive line’s infirmity than it did with him driving a Lambo instead of a Pinto.

At Miami, Beck will step behind an experienced offensive line that could help him look more like his 2023 self, when he completed 72.4% of his passes while getting more time to throw.

Beck should enjoy doing business against ACC defenses, too. In Cam Ward’s lone season quarterbacking Miami, he became a Heisman Trophy finalist. Now, he’s a projected top-five NFL draft pick. This can prove fertile ground for Beck.

Beck faced a lofty bar at Georgia. He succeeded a predecessor who won two national championships and famously used a flip phone to minimize distraction.

Never mind that Beck spent three seasons loyal to Georgia as a backup quarterback, his hot rods cast him as a distracted hot dog.

Plus, Beck grew up a Florida fan. The nerve! Beck committed to Florida baseball and later Alabama football before finally signing with Kirby Smart’s program.

Contrast Beck’s origin story with that of Stetson Bennett IV, his predecessor who went from walk-on to Georgia’s bourbon-chugging hero.

Then, consider Gunner Stockton, a good ol’ Georgia boy and Beck’s former backup who rallied the Bulldogs to a victory in the SEC championship game after Beck’s second-quarter injury.

Once ESPN revealed in December that Stockton drives a vintage Ford F-150, it just felt like the curtain dropped on Beck at Georgia.

What chance did Beck have to win Georgia fans’ hearts, especially after he threw all those interceptions, in between videos of him putting the pedal to the metal and snapping photos with his Instagram model girlfriend, who doubles as a Miami basketball player?

Beck wore out his welcome with Georgia, but he’s only too ideal for Miami, a program comfortable in the antihero casting.

Beck need not apologize for liking sports cars, striking NIL deals – I wonder if The Club needs a new spokesperson – dating an influencer or for transferring after five seasons at Georgia. Just win.

And if you allow yourself to stop seeing Beck in a black hat, maybe you’ll recognize this as his chance for a comeback story, a redemption tale of a quarterback who lost his touch at Georgia, then respawned in college football’s capital for antiheroes.

Psychology Today once wrote of antiheroes: “They are who they are, and they do as they want – without apology.”

Yeah, that sounds like Miami – and not unlike Beck, either.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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He arrived with the blueprint and the coaching chops. Insert plan, change a program. 

Three seasons later, his team is down 34 points in the second quarter as the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff.

“It’s not about getting knocked down,” says Oregon coach Dan Lanning, “It’s about what you do next.”

So here we are, and the road to becoming Alabama and Georgia has reached nearly every milestone, every point of the process that leads to the development of a championship program. Except the one defining result.

Winning the whole damn thing. 

“Ultimately you have to be great teams to beat teams at the end of the year,” Lanning said.

Great teams don’t give up late fourth quarter leads in the last month of the season, two that cost Oregon a chance to play in the College Football Playoff in 2022, and one in 2023. 

Great teams don’t get overwhelmed as the No. 1 seed in the CFP in 2024, a redemption moment for the previous two failures that hit flat — and has now become the motivation for 2025.

This all or nothing, of course, is the problem. Not because the Ducks haven’t won big under Lanning, but because Oregon isn’t Alabama or Georgia. 

And Lanning – all of 38 years old and in his first head coaching job – isn’t Nick Saban or Kirby Smart. But like it or not, he’s tied at the hip to two of the greatest coaches in the modern era of college football. 

Saban built the Alabama dynasty, and Smart was his top lieutenant for eight seasons (winning four national titles). Smart eventually built the best team in college football at Georgia, and won a national title with Lanning as his top lieutenant.

So the natural progression in the land of unrealistic expectations is Lanning taking Saban’s famed “process” program buildout, the same process Smart used at Georgia, and building a beast at Oregon. If he doesn’t, it’s failure. 

Which is absolutely absurd.

But like it or not, fair or not, that’s the backdrop to this offseason, to eight long months of finding a way to be better than the only unbeaten team in college football at the end of the this past regular season. To go one step further than beating three playoff teams in the regular season, despite the inherent challenges of a new conference and the unique travel obstacles of playing in the Big Ten.

Eight long months with this backdrop for the rebuild: Oregon loses an NCAA record-breaking quarterback, four starting offensive linemen, four of its top five wide receivers, and the majority of a defense that finished No. 16 in the nation in scoring.

But it’s at these inflection points where Lanning and Oregon mirror Alabama and Georgia in terms of process. Lanning has signed back-to-back top five recruiting classes, and three in the top 10, according to the 247Sports composite ranking.

Elite players are arriving, both from high school recruiting and the transfer portal. Lanning and his staff are developing at a high level (hello, Bo Nix), and they’ve won 35 of 41 games. 

It looks and feels just like Alabama and Georgia, with the nagging exception of big game struggles. But Saban and Smart went through similar problems, and eventually found a way out.

It took Saban one season to figure out how to beat Florida, and then another season to figure out how to beat complacency. It took Smart and Georgia three years to rebound from a gut-punch loss to Saban in the 2017 national championship game. 

Saban and Smart did it by recruiting elite difference-makers on the defensive line, and Lanning is following the same plan. Now those same emerging defensive linemen and edge rushers — Matayo Uiagalelei, Teitum Tuioti, Aydin Breland, Blake Purchase — will be the foundation and attitude of a reloading team.

Scoring points won’t be a problem. They system is in place, the talent is there. 

It’s the Alabama and Georgia attitude, the might and fright of a defensive line that dictates games, that controls everything. And by everything, I mean, everything.

That’s the final piece to the puzzle, the last step to completing the process. That’s what’s next, not some easy, boiler plate ideal of winning it all. 

That’s just the reward of figuring it all out. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

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Attorneys for LeBron James and Bronny James answered a civil lawsuit filed four months ago alleging the two were involved in an automobile accident in 2022 that left two women injured and without a working vehicle, denying ‘each and every allegation,’ per court documents obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

The incident allegedly occurred on Nov. 13, 2022, and the civil complaint was filed on Oct. 23, 2024.

In the original complaint, attorney Jeffrey R. Billings for plaintiffs Kiara Rae McGillen and April Almanza Lopez claim they were in a collision involving Los Angeles Lakers LeBron and Bronny James and “plaintiffs sustained personal injuries which caused and will continue to cause pain, discomfort and physical disability to plaintiffs.”

The automobile accident was alleged to have taken place in Littlerock, California, about an hour’s drive northeast of Los Angeles.

Neither the Palmdale Sherriff’s Station nor the California Highway Patrol have reports filed on the alleged crash, according to ESPN. The Palmdale Sheriff’s Station serves the town of Littlerock.

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Attorneys Sonali Olson and Nicole R. Fassonaki said their clients “deny each and every allegation contained in the complaint and further deny that plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum or sums alleged, or any other sum or sums, or at all.”

The suit also claims the vehicle of Lopez “was damaged and depreciated so that repairs were necessary” and she “lost the use of said automobile.” The suit also claims each plaintiff was “gainfully employed for compensation” and “has been and, in the future, will be deprived of earnings.”

In the multi-point rebuttal filed Feb. 20, attorneys for James and his son said, “defendants allege that plaintiffs’ complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against these answering defendants” and “if plaintiffs suffered or sustained loss, damage or injury as alleged in the complaint, such loss, damage or injury was proximately caused and contributed to by plaintiffs in failing to conduct themselves in a manner ordinarily expected of a reasonably prudent person in the conduct of their affairs and person. Plaintiffs’ recovery herein is diminished to the extent that plaintiffs’ damages are attributable to plaintiffs’ negligence.”

The attorneys for the James’ also “allege that third parties other than these answering defendants were responsible in whole or in part for the damages alleged in the complaint.”

USA TODAY Sports reached out to the James’ attorney for additonal comment.

(This story has been updated to include new information).

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PHOENIX — It was the Los Angeles Dodgers’ pitching version of ‘Charlie’s Angels’ across three different fields in front of frenzied fans Tuesday in the morning and early afternoon, charming the Dodgers coaching staff and front office with visions of October already in the air.

It was Shohei Ohtani at 10:30 in the morning, pitching his fourth bullpen session since joining the Dodgers, showing why optimism is rampant in camp that he’ll be dominating on the mound in May. He looks like he could be ready by opening day instead of two months into the season the way he has thrown.

Has he surprised the Dodgers?

“Yes, given who the player is and who the person is,’ Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said, “but there’s still a process that we are going through. He just understands that we’ve got a long season to go, so he’s sort of bought into whatever we need from him.

“But very surprised how quick it’s gone and seeing this is great.’

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Next up was 23-year-old Japanese sensation Rōki Sasaki. He was supposed to throw just two innings, but wound up going three, throwing 30 pitches four Chicago White Sox minor-league players. He threw 102 mph in Japan, but his velocity was in the mid-90s Tuesday, giving up a home run to prized catching prospect Kyle Teel on his second pitch, and generating four swing-and-misses.

“He’s been a star since he was 16 years old,’ Roberts said, “so he probably hasn’t got hit a lot. But some of these guys that I’ve seen that have been really good pitchers, they get hit in the mouth and respond back. So he doesn’t run away from the competition. That’s part of his pedigree.’

On the big stage at 1:05 p.m. was two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell, making his Dodgers debut facing the Seattle Mariners. He threw plenty of strikes – 20 in 30 pitches – but lasted just one inning when he was scheduled to go two. He had two swing-and-misses, each against All-Star center fielder Julio Rodriguez in his lone strikeout.

“To start our day watching Shohei throwing a professional bullpen, to come out of it feeling great,’ Roberts said. “Then you go on the back field and see Rōki go three innings and do what he did. … Today, overall, was a really good day for us.’

It was an embarrassment of riches with Snell disappointed he wasn’t on hand to check out Ohtani and Sasaki.

“It’s a lot of talent, sad I couldn’t watch,’ Snell said, “but I had to get ready. But the talent here is pretty, pretty amazing and I’m excited to be here.’

And, oh yeah, just for a little reminder of this abundance of talent, there is a picture of three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw, who’s expected to return in May, sitting in his locker.

“It’s there for a reason,’ Snell said.

There will be a time this season when they will all be together, along with Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, Kershaw and Dustin May.

No wonder Yamamoto and Ohtani made sure to stop by show their support by watching Sasaki throw, with teammates, front office executives and coaches all eying the young star.

“He’s a guy everyone wanted,’ Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts said, “so he’s why everyone’s going to watch him.’

No one is predicting that Sasaki is going to go out and win the Cy Young award his rookie season, but you can’t find anyone who’s doesn’t see future stardom.

“I thought Rōki was good, ‘aid Roberts, who sat in a golf cart with special assistant Farhan Zaidi watching Sasaki, and then driving away with Andrew Friedman, Dodgers president of baseball operations and GM Brandon Gomes riding in the back. “Velocity looked good. I thought there’s a lot of chase with his split mixed in some breaking balls.

“Talking to our pitching guys, we were pretty pleased with the outing. … He’s getting really acclimated to Major League Baseball. He’s in a good spot.

The tentative plan is for Yamamoto to pitch Game 1 in Tokyo against the Chicago Cubs, Sasaki to pitch the second game, and then for Snell to pitch the Dodgers’ home opener on March 27 against Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal and the Detroit Tigers.

Snell, who missed all but the final week of spring training last season after signing March 28 with the San Francisco Giants, says he’ll be ready, pleased that his fastball command is already far ahead of schedule. He didn’t feel comfortable until the second half last year, going 0-3 with a 6.31 ERA the first half, and then dominating the National League after the All-Star break with a 5-0 record and 1.45 ERA, striking out 103 batters in 68 ⅓ innings.

“Last year was definitely challenging,’’ Snell said. “It taught me a lot so I’m definitely happy that I went through that I was able to learn from it.’

This is why Snell arrived early in camp, learning his teammates, getting familiar with the coaches and settling in an to have that the comfort level when he stepped onto the mound Tuesday.

“I think for him to just be in camp, get on some type of routine, he’s well beyond where hew was last year,’ Roberts said. “You can just kind of see it. He doesn’t let us know too much but certainly just being around him each day, getting into a routine, he’s in a good place.

The only thing Snell has to get acclimated to now is wearing the Dodger uniform after competing against them in the 2020 World Series with Tampa, and being a rival with the San Diego Padres and Giants.

“The first time putting on a Dodger uniform, so I was definitely excited about that,’’ Snell said. “I think pitching in front of fans again is really exciting.’

So just imagine the euphoria of everyone else.

“Unbelievable, right?’ Dodgers reliever Michael Kopech said. “The talent in here is just incredible.’

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INDIANAPOLIS – Call it a Tush Pushback.

At minimum, that encapsulated head coach Nick Sirianni’s thinking when asked about the latest, ahem, push to ban what’s become a signature play of his reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles. He even went so far as saying it would be “unfair” for the NFL to outlaw a strategy – the Tush Push is essentially a variation of the quarterback sneak, Philly packing in its line while Jalen Hurts is typically propelled forward from behind by other teammates – that’s given the Eagles a competitive advantage and decried the notion that it’s either unstoppable or that anyone can successfully implement it.

“I’ve seen some of the stuff (suggesting) that it’s an ‘automatic’ play,” Sirianni said Tuesday at the NFL scouting combine. “I almost feel a little insulted, because we work so hard at that play. The amount of things that we’ve looked into how to coach that play, the fundamentals – there’s a thousand plays out there, it comes down to how you teach the fundamentals and how the players (execute) the fundamentals. I can’t tell you how many times we practice the snap, we practice the play – because it’s not a play that’s easy to practice, there’s different ways we’ve figured out how to practice it.

“We work really, really hard, and our guys are talented at this play. And so it’s a little insulting to say, ‘We’re good at it, so it’s automatic.’”

They’re certainly effective if not surefire.

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Since the Eagles started Tush Pushing with regularity during the 2022 season, Hurts has rushed for 42 touchdowns – two-thirds of those (or 28) from the 1-yard line, including 11 from that distance in each of the past two campaigns. During that period, Philadelphia has consistently been at or near the top of the league in converting third and fourth downs, never executing worse than 41% on third down or 68% on fourth.

Those figures become more daunting in short-yardage scenarios and certainly near the goal line. Hurts’ 1-yard push into the end zone opened the scoring in Philadelphia’s Super Bowl 59 rout of the of Kansas City Chiefs earlier this month.

But it’s not, in fact, automatic.

“It wasn’t a hundred percent for us this year, we missed on some two-point conversions from the one (yard line), we missed on some third downs, we missed on some fourth downs. I think we were in the eighty percent (range),” said Sirianni. “Just because it’s a successful play for us doesn’t mean that it should go away.”

But that could be under consideration at next month’s annual league meeting after the Green Bay Packers submitted a proposal to ban the play.

“Obviously I’m protective of it because we’ve had success with it, but again I think that the competition committee will do a good job of looking at everything,” said Sirianni.

And one thing the competition committee – and anybody in the NFL – would have to concede is that the Eagles have built one of the most talented and formidable offensive lines in recent history. Philadelphia’s starting five in Super Bowl 59 averaged 6-6 and 338 pounds, the largest unit ever fielded on Super Sunday. Right tackle Lane Johnson is close to a Hall of Fame lock. Left tackle Jordan Mailata is quickly building his own impressive résumé. Center Cam Jurgens and left guard Landon Dickerson are among the league’s best at their respective positions. And with instruction from legendary O-line coach Jeff Stoutland and the positional resourcing provided by executive vice president and general manager Howie Roseman, there can be a feeling of inevitably when this group is in its blocking groove.

Mix in occasional fakes the Eagles use out of the alignment or deep shots they’ll take on third down knowing the percentages might favor them on fourth-and-short, and Sirianni knows it’s a deadly formula.

“I think that it’s a skill that our team has because of the players that we have, the way the coaches coach it,” added Sirianni, who closely studies how other clubs use their own versions of it. He also noted how other teams’ inability to leverage the play – meaning the Buffalo Bills – was costly during conference championship weekend.

“Again, there’s so much time put into it,” he continued. “The fact that it’s a successful play for the Eagles and people want to take that way I think is a little unfair.”

Yet it can invite a chaotic response. The Washington Commanders repeatedly encroached trying to defeat the Tush Push during the NFC championship game – to the point that officials threatened to award the Eagles a touchdown. Mailata said the sequence devolved into ‘mental warfare.’

Some also contend that the play can be inherently dangerous with so much condensed humanity moving in one direction amid restricted space.

‘There’s always been injury risk, and I’ve expressed that opinion over the last couple of years when it really started to come into play the way it’s being used, especially a year ago,’ Bills coach Sean McDermott said Monday.

‘It’s just that play to me – or the way that the techniques that are used with that play to me – have been potentially contrary to the health and safety of the players. Again, you have to go back in fairness to the injury data on the play, but I just think the optics of it, I’m not in love with.’

It’s another argument Sirianni downplays.

“We’ve looked into that, too, there wasn’t a lot of injuries there,” he claimed. “I think that’s a little made up to be honest. … I can’t remember one injury we’ve had on that play, and we’ve (run) it more than everybody else.

“I’m all for player safety for that … I think that’s just something that’s said, but I don’t think the numbers on that play suggest that.”

He’ll know soon enough if the important numbers – competition committee votes – remain advantageous to the Eagles or not.

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